I want to map something as below, is it possible?
<wls:virtual-directory-mapping>
<wls:local-path>D:/OTJ/upload</wls:local-path>
<wls:url-pattern>/*</wls:url-pattern>
</wls:virtual-directory-mapping>
<wls:virtual-directory-mapping>
<wls:local-path>D:/OTK/upload</wls:local-path>
<wls:url-pattern>/*</wls:url-pattern>
</wls:virtual-directory-mapping>
never tried but I dont think you can, Weblogic don't know where to look for resources in that case (or probably will choose only one of the two).
What's the wanted behavior?
Related
I got a partial answer here but not exactly what I wanted.
The link describes how to get a list of task futures but what I'd really like to be able to do is list out and cancel individual jobs (that might be hung, long running etc etc). I've seen another post implying that this is not possible but I'd like to confirm (see second link)
Thanks
http://apache-ignite-users.70518.x6.nabble.com/How-can-I-obtain-a-list-of-executing-jobs-on-an-ignite-node-td8841.html
http://apache-ignite-users.70518.x6.nabble.com/Cancel-tasks-on-Ignite-compute-grid-worker-nodes-td5027.html
Yes, this is not possible and actually I'm not sure how this can be done in general case. Imagine there are 5 jobs running and you want to cancel one of them. How are you going to identify it? It seems to be very use case specific to me.
However, you can always implement your own mechanism to do this. One of the possible ways is to use ComputeTaskSession API and task attributes. E.g., set a special attribute that will act as signal for job cancellation and create attribute listener that will stop job execution accordingly.
So my friend is trying to access a command block, he has op and gamemode 1, but when he right clicks it, nothing happens. Does anyone know how to fix this?
In your server.properties, you must set commandblocks to true(I am not looking at one at the moment, but it is something like that). Once that is set, restart your server, and it should work.
Maybe a plugin is blocking the commandblock access.
Can you use the commandblock?
Add you and your friend to the op list (also check ops.json).
Try to put you and your friend into the same permission group if you have a permission plugin.
As #mttprvst13 said, make sure commandblocks is set to true in your server.properties. Plugins may also be blocking it, but probably not due to the fact that he is an operator.
My application needs to be able to serve up static content which can be contained in a number of different places (directories and/or via the class loader). So, for example, a resource /static/file.html might be found in /dir1/file.html or /dir2/file.html; I would want it to try /dir1, and if not found there, then /dir2, and so on.
With servlets in Jetty, I can use either a HandlerList of DefaultServlet, to sequentially try to handle the request from each directory until satisfied, or even easier a single DefaultServlet with a ResourceCollection.
I can't see a way to do something similar in restlet, without writing a class to specifically do this. I could modify Directory to handle multiple sources (in a similar way to DefaultServlet with ResourceCollection), or write a new Restlet which tries each contained Restlet sequentially, until successfully handled (like HandlerList). But before I do that, am I missing another way that already exists to achieve this?
thanks,
Stuart
I confirm that Directory doesn't know how to handle multiple source directories. It would be a nice to add support for this and contribute it back.
I know almost nothing about Documentum, so there are probably omissions in the information you need to answer my questions. But I'm going to try, anyway...
We use Documentum (obviously). Within Documentum, users can create workflows. These workflows contain ordered lists of services that are used to process data. So, we may have ServiceA, ServiceB, ServiceC, ServiceD, and ServiceE, and a user can create a workflow that says to process the data using, in order: ServiceC, ServiceA, and ServiceB. Another user's list might be: ServiceA, ServiceD, ServiceE.
I've been asked to find a way to get a list containing the id/name of each user, the user's workflow id (name?), and items within the workflow. From what I've read here on StackOverflow and elsewhere, it looks like this is possible via DQL.
And, if I have the DQL, it turns out that this will be simple to do using interfaces we've already built. If it's too complex, I'll need to write Java and use the API. I'd prefer the DQL.. :-)
So, can someone here provide me with a pointer to a reference on DQL, and perhaps some pointers on what to look at/for?
Maybe you need more than one DQL-Query. However, I would strongly recommend writing some DFC code and iterating over the results.
I would suggest to have a look in the Documentum Content Server Object Reference to find out more about the attributes of type dm_workflow (and, of course, related types like dmi_workitem, dmc_workqueue, etc.).
These types should provide the information you are looking for and where you might start best.
I would want to program something where you upload a file on the one side and the other person can download it the moment I start uploading. I knew such a service but can't remember the name. If you know the service I'd like to know the name if its not there anymore I'd like to program it as an opensource project.
And it is supposed to be a website
What you're describing sounds a lot like Bit Torrent.
You might be able to achieve this by uploading via a custom ISAPI filter (if you use IIS) -- all CGI implementations won't start to run your script until the request has completed, which makes sense, as you won't have been told all the values just yet, I'd suspect ISAPI may fall foul of this as well.
So, your next best bet is to write a custom HTTP server, that can handle the serving of files yet to finish uploading.
pipebytes.com I found it :)